21st Critics' Choice Awards

21st Critics' Choice Awards
Date January 17, 2016
Hosted by T. J. Miller
Highlights
Best Film Spotlight
Most awards Mad Max: Fury Road (9)
Most nominations Mad Max: Fury Road (13)
Television coverage
Network A&E LMN Lifetime

The 21st Critics' Choice Awards were presented on January 17, 2016 at the Santa Monica Airport's Barker Hangar in California, honoring the finest achievements in 2015 filmmaking. It was broadcast on A&E, and hosted by T. J. Miller. Nominees for the awards were announced on December 14, 2015.[1] This year marked the first time the awards were presented with the television awards.[2]

Winners and nominees

Best Picture
Best Director
Best Actor
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor
Best Supporting Actress
Best Young Actor/Actress
Best Acting Ensemble
Best Original Screenplay
Best Adapted Screenplay
Best Animated Feature
Best Action Movie
Best Actor in an Action Movie
Best Actress in an Action Movie
Best Sci-Fi/Horror Movie
Best Comedy
Best Actor in a Comedy
Best Actress in a Comedy
Best Documentary Feature
Best Foreign Language Film
Best Art Direction
Best Costume Design
Best Cinematography
Best Editing
Best Score
Best Song
Best Hair and Makeup
Best Visual Effects

Louis XIII Genius Award

Industrial Light & Magic

Critics' Choice MVP Award

Amy Schumer

"Most Bingeworthy" Fan-Voted Award

Outlander

Films by multiple nominations and wins

Star Wars: The Force Awakens controversy

The film Star Wars: The Force Awakens screened too late for the vast majority of the Broadcast Film Critics Association to see it in time for consideration for the awards. But after what an email to members called "an unprecedented cry out" from its membership, the BFCA's board of directors called a "special referendum" on adding the movie to the 10 candidates for Best Picture, which it won. (A similar situation happened for the 6th Critics' Choice Awards in 2001, in which the film Cast Away was voted by referendum to be included among the nominees for Best Picture.) The BFCA faced immediate criticism, including from its own members, over what many saw as an attempt to increase ratings for the awards ceremony's broadcast on A&E (which, is 50% owned by Disney, the company behind Star Wars) on January 17.[3] Two members, Eric Melin (who runs Scene-Stealers.com, the film critic at the Lawrence Journal-World, and the president of the Kansas City Film Critics Circle), and Scott Renshaw of Salt Lake City Weekly, resigned in protest.

Melin, in an open letter, said:

"In order for a professional critics body to have integrity, nomination and voting guidelines must be consistent with the way they were laid out at the beginning of the process. Nominating Star Wars: The Force Awakens for Best Picture does not follow those guidelines, and re-ignites a loophole for this kind of thing to happen every year... Unlike the other nominations, this was not decided upon using a weighted ballot of all possibilities, and it smells like a desperate ploy to get better TV ratings. Additionally, your insistence on billing the Critic’s Choice Awards as the 'most accurate predictor of the Academy Awards' is antithetical to the purpose of having a 'critic’s choice' award at all. The awards should not serve as another TV marketing arm to the studios. Rather, it should represent the views and opinions of film critics, which is a very different group from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. As film criticism continues to be devalued and the lines between journalist, critic, and studio shill continue to be blurred, the only thing we have is our integrity, and this smacks of a marketing ploy. Believe me, I know because my day job is a social media marketer. What I am not is an employee of A&E networks, and the only thing I have as a lowly paid film critic is the courage of my convictions."
Eric Melin, [4]

Similarly in another open letter, Scott Renshaw said:

"This decision has been a long time coming, but was made inevitable by the decision to change the voting process to allow Star Wars: Episode VII- The Force Awakens to be included as a nominee after the official nominating deadline. Irrespective of any precedent that may be invoked... it is obvious to me that this decision is based more on marketing value than making sure that the best films are included. If that were the case, the entire nomination process would have been opened up again to allow The Force Awakens to be considered in all categories. Any suggestion that this decision was made primarily for any reason other than to improve ratings for the awards broadcast feels disingenuous at best. An awards voting body has nothing to stand on but its integrity. I no longer feel my own personal integrity is consistent with ongoing membership in this organization."
Scott Renshaw, [5]

See also

References

  1. "Critics' Choice Awards Nominations: 'Mad Max' Leads Film; ABC, HBO, FX Networks & 'Fargo' Top TV". Deadline.com. December 14, 2015. Retrieved December 14, 2015.
  2. Guglielmi, Jodi (December 14, 2015). "Critics' Choice Awards Mad About Mad Max: Fury Road as Nominations Are Announced". people.com. Retrieved January 29, 2016.
  3. Adams, Sam (December 22, 2015). "Broadcast Film Critics Association Faces Criticism for Adding 'The Force Awakens' to Best Picture Ballot". Indiewire. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  4. Melin, Eric (December 22, 2015). "WHY I RESIGNED FROM THE BFCA OVER "STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS"". Scene Stealers. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  5. Renshaw, Scott (December 22, 2015). "Scott Renshaw on Twitter: Sent. Buh-bye, BFCA.". twitter.com. Twitter. Retrieved December 22, 2015.

External links

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